TE22 Potpourri

Andrea Lundgren

Nordic Fauna

I never see the whole image. Maybe, like just now, the rail of a skiff, Mum’s hands as she shoves the picnic basket under one of the seats. A little water pooling at the lowest point. Dad on the oars with his sleeves rolled up, the hair on his arms. Then gone, and nothing more. How old was I? Six? Seven? Ten? We must have been on our way somewhere, but I don’t recall. Just the boat, our little boat. Dad’s calm rowing, the scraping noise of the oars against the rail, no creaking oarlocks – they were broken, I think – and then the wooden blades as they sliced through the surface, caught and hauled the boat forward. Towards Storholmen in the middle of the river, perhaps. The spot you could walk to in winter before they started messing with the spillways. Mum insisting on snowshoes, Dad getting Tanja to pull the sledge with the ground pads and ice-fishing rods. The last time I was down by the river in the summer, wasn’t there a tarpaulin along the bank? A little mound of dark green, military green? Maybe the skiff is still down there. If that’s the case, no one ever uses it. It must be just lying there, as though hidden away. Glittering sun, lapping waves, my hand hanging down in the water, and I can’t stop watching it, because earlier that same summer a child dipping their toes in the water had been bitten by a pike. There were pike in the river, that much I knew. Big prehistoric beasts down there in the seaweed jungle. Mum chuckled at my fear, Dad… what’s Dad doing? He’s watching a flock of waterfowl take off. Following them with his gaze as though in slow motion, his neck extending as he tracks the birds’ wingbeats; we can almost feel them from 130

where we sit, drifting this way and that in the current. Maybe Dad is tired and has stopped rowing, maybe his arms are sore, but he has let go of the oars; they glide slowly over the rail and down into the water. Mum hears the splash, but before she can get to them they have floated out of reach. She looks terrified. Dad is still almost bewitched by the birds, who seem to have flown directly into the sun. I tear my gaze away from the pike, but when I follow his instead the light is so dazzling that I’m blinded. Without oars we’re tugged helplessly along by the current. Mum says Dad’s name, louder and louder, until at last she’s almost screaming. But it’s as though he neither hears nor sees, as though he is no longer with us in the boat. The half-eaten loaf of cinnamon coffee bread is still on the kitchen table. Dad sliced it with a table knife and we have eaten a couple of pieces each. Dropped crumbs, drunk coffee. He looks tired, bags under his eyes. The kitchen is messy, even though he was expecting me. I brought the bread just in case. He fetched an envelope of cash. Two 500-krona notes. I told him it was too much. Wanted to take one of them and hand it to him, was just about to pull it out when something stopped me. I heard Mum’s voice in the back of my head. So I just said thanks. He said happy birthday. The bread wasn’t dry after all, despite having been discounted. I found it in a basket next to the checkout with a big red REDUCED sticker that I peeled off. Not sure why.

After coffee I head into the living room to have a look.

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